Featured Image

Featured Video

New from ASM Press

Join MicrobeWorld

Supporters

Subscribe via Email

Microbes have been around longer than ANYthing else on earth—longer than dinosaurs, plants or people. Here's the clue to prove it: fossils of single-celled creatures that date back at least 3.5 BILLION years! We humans only came on the scene about 2 million years ago.

If you imagine all time since the Earth began as a single day...

Microbes would have appeared sometime around 5:00 a.m...

Dinosaurs don't pop up until around 10:00 at night...

and we humans don'tfigure in until just seconds before midnight!

Microbes developed when the Earth was still relatively new, a mass of steaming lava, boiling water and a swirl of methane, ammonia and other smelly gases. Out of these basic elements, proteins—the building blocks of life—developed. These proteins came together to form bacteria, the first creatures that could reproduce themselves and contained a genetic blueprint, or DNA. Early cells eventually developed into more complex single-celled creatures, such as the first algae and protozoa.

Microbes became so good at survival that they've continued to live on the planet through today and they are now EVERYwhere. If all the microbes on and in the Earth could be gathered in one place, they would take up more space than all the animals put together!

There are a lot of clues that tell us why microbes have been such an evolutionary success. Here are the top three: